Thanks, but It's only 20mph
Throttle great question.Electra Cafe Moto is now $4,500 according to their site. AlexZ, did you have a preference for throttle or no throttle?
The Evelo Aurora mid drive has those specs, not FS. Also see Watt Wagons, @pushkar could build something https://electricbikereview.com/foru...onal-electronic-shifting-shipping-july.33992/
July 20 delivery not bad.Wow, very informative. Thank you. Looks like I might just go with an Evelo Aurora Limited Edition Mid-Drive, It has all my basic qualifications and costs $4k. Sadly, the only Watt Wagon I could find on their site with a Nuvinci hub was $6k+. Do you know the exact model of Watt Wagon? Focus Aventura Impulse Speed 1.0 also doesn't have a Nuvinci or rohloff, and is $5k. Really helpful Though. Evelo looks like the best option.
Good point. Guess I want at least around 500wh+ battery. The more battery I can get for sub $4k, the better.It's worth knowing what kind of range you want. I have tried out the Aurora Limited and even with peddling and capping at just 20 mph, I could barely cover 20 miles.
Why not go with the Shimano 5-speed option on the city commuter? Btw Rohloff is not an option on the City Commter, only Sturney Archer 3-speed, Shimano 5-speed, and Kindernay 14-speed.sdtr443w, thank you for that. I was on the fence about the Aurora, and your post tipped the scale for me to not buy it. I should stick with an e-bike that is specifically made for 28mph. Watt Wagons City Commuter looks like a good fit for me... It's actually rated for 28mph. Unfortunately, the Bafang M600 motor it uses is too powerful for Eviolo's Nuvinci CVT 380 hub. Guess I'll have to settle for the Rohloff speed hum instead. Don't get me wrong, it's a very nice upgrade, but more money than I'd like to spend.
I would probably be looking at the Shimano 5 speed. Are there some concerns I should have with that setup.
Ah, Ruskin! Long time since grad school! Bravo!I understand if your budget is constrained by your circumstances. However let me share my experience. The first ebike I bought had a derailleur system, an inexpensive front shock but otherwise decent components. I found I was riding way more often and further than I could have imagined. I was hardly driving my car any more. But my bum constantly ached and it did not go away, various saddles, and two suspension seat posts later, along with frequent chain and cassette changes, I decided I needed and better bike, with better suspension, internal gearing and belt and better lighting for visibility and personal safety. So getting the right bike cost me more in the long run by starting cheap and then moving up to what I should have bought in the first place. When I sold the first bike I lost only got half the money I paid for it back.
As John Ruskin said about 150 years ago:
"It's unwise to pay too much, but it's worse to pay too little. When you pay too much, you lose a little money – that is all. When you pay too little, you sometimes lose everything, because the thing you bought was incapable of doing the thing it was bought to do. The common law of business balance prohibits paying a little and getting a lot – it can't be done. If you deal with the lowest bidder, it is well to add something for the risk you run, and if you do that you will have enough to pay for something better."
I find the pain of paying more than I planned for the right bike faded quickly and I was left with the pleasure of riding a bike that ticks off all the right boxes every day I ride.
Assist level | Average Speed (low number is easy and higher number is hard pedaling) | Average Maximum Range |
1 | 20-25 kph / 12.4 - 15.5 mph | 100 km / 62 mi |
2 | 25-30 kph / 15.5 - 18.6 mph | 60 km / 37 mi |
3 | 32-39 kph / 19.9 - 24.2 mph | 45 km / 27 mi |
Turbo | 40-45 kph / 24.9 - 28 mph | 25 km / 15.5 mi |